Barry Steyn de551a93c2 Updated documentation and fixed a bug | %!s(int64=9) %!d(string=hai) anos | |
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Readme.md | %!s(int64=9) %!d(string=hai) anos | |
__init__.py | %!s(int64=9) %!d(string=hai) anos | |
inline.py | %!s(int64=9) %!d(string=hai) anos | |
pelican_inline_markdown_extension.py | %!s(int64=9) %!d(string=hai) anos |
This plugin lets you customize inline HTML within Markdown by extending Python's Markdown module.
To enable, ensure that the md_inline_extension
plugin is accessible.
Then add the following to settings.py:
PLUGINS = ["md_inline_extension"]
By default, any Markdown text inside []...[]
will get wrapped in
span
tags with a class of pelican-inline
. For example:
[]Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit[]
will
become <span class="pelican-inline">Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit</span>
You can create your own inline patterns and associate them with
arbitrary classes and styles by using the MD_INLINE
dictionary in settings.
The dictionary takes a pattern as key and expects either a string or a tuple
as a value. If a string is provided, then that will be the CSS class. If
a tuple is provided, then the first value will be the style, and the second
value (if present) will be the class. For example:
MD_INLINE = {
'+=+': ('color:red;', 'my-test-class'),
'|-|': ('color:blue;',),
'&^': 'my-other-text-class',
}
The above defines three new inline patterns:
+=+
will be wrapped in span
tags like so<span style="color:red;" class="my-test-class">...</span>
|-|
will be wrapped in
<span style="color:blue;">...</span>
. Note - no class is present.&^
will be wrapped in
<span class="my-other-text-class">...</span>
. Note - no style present.In order to work seamlessly with default inline patterns such as *
and
**
, it is important that your pattern not contain these characters. So
do not create patterns that are already part of a default Markdown
span element.